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Ron
OTOH, most insurance doesn't pay for TCM and herbal treatments, which are nearly as costly as SOC. Additionally, whatever the extent of your liver damage, it will probably increase more quickly after the age of 60 than it has up till now. I'm 63 years old, stage 2, grade 2, so I was certainly able to hold off treatment if I so chose, but because of my age I decided to plunge in and get it over with. Also I was suffering from fatigue, which influenced my decision. Unfortunately, there's no cut and dried answer to your question. All I know is that treatment was very hard on me, and I'm glad I did it now as I'd shudder to think what it would be like as an older person.
II have my last 2 months shipment. I will be done with tx in 9 weeks. They are worth the cost. What price can you put on how you feel and to help protect your liver? I have no regrets taking his herbs the past 4 years. They have helped me tremendously.
saw second gastro - my VL was 192 and he said you're cured.
Saw third one. VL 4000. started treating. UND at week two. Still UND at week 14.
it was an easy decision for me because of the acute thing. best chance to treat is within 6 months of infection. my UND seems to bear it out.
we'll see.
every case is different.
deb
" have been recently done the Liver Biopsy, as suggested dr. Two years back I came to know ,i have the Hep-b positive. Then started the treatmnet with Gastroentrologist/Hepologist. As the SGPT/SGOT were in the normal range , no specific medicine was advised except herbal medicine.
Now last month during the followup check ,found the sgpt/sgot values elevated above the normal values,And the HBV Dna quantative 1406306.0 IU/ml."
Basically the herbs did nothing, in fact his hep reactivated. There are always 2 sides to a story whether its treatement drugs or herbs.
My advice to anyone hitting the mid 50's with geno 1 is to get the biopsy done. Whether and when you then go ahead with TX is a very tough call that depends on disease stage, your general condition and (in my opinion) availability of protease inhibitors. What has changed over the last 5 years is that we now know that VX-950 as part of a triple cocktail is very effective and its a fair best that the combo will find its way to the market by 2009 at the latest. At that point the success odds for geno 1's approach those of geno 2s and 3's : ie 75% or better. TX is not without its dangers, but what other option actually gets rid of your problem?
I never understood "wait & watch" technique - to me it is the same as "hide & watch your decease to progress and more difficult to treat"...
Good luck on your decision, Upbeat!
All the best
Im 43 - diagnosed 2 months ago - go for ultrasound next week - if no damage - will wait for that "triple cocktail" hopefully by 2009.
I am 1A geno, and 56 years of age, your research and evoloution is very similar to mine. in fact I am tucson as well, and did a year thru the "integrative clinic" at UMC.
In the end didn't do much to help my enzymes, which was the my goal to slow to inflammation and hopefully the fibrosis, didn't quite work out that way. I did a telephone consult with Dr. Zhang and was turned off when the first thing he asked was for my Master Card #. It was just a bit overwhelming the amount of herbs he was suggesting. I know some are very happy with that approach,
but I don't know if his statistics have ever been verified...
I have had two Biopsy and a fibrosure blood test in the past,
decided to treat because of my level of Fibrosis, now, just few weeks left on my 48 weeks. I wish I would have done even earlier, for all my consternation on the subject, I know the odds, but I decided to just get it over with.
HCV is not going away on its own.
Would encourage you to get a Biopsy, that's the key, I think most would agree, perhaps your damage is minimal , requiring no interventions. If you don't want to do the Biopsy, try the fibrosure, it's not that expensive, supposedly fairly relaible on the lower or higher ends of Fibrosis. At least another data point for you to consider.
good luck
PS if you ever do treat, try and time it away from summer, the heat is murder...
in the next 5 years it should go from 45% to 95% with the new drugs. it should also drop time in tx from 48 weeks to maybe 4 weeks. SO why tx now when in 1 or 2 years from now tx may be so much more successfull in such a short time unless you MUST tx now? FEAR?
WHAT IS WRONG WITH WAITING
in the next 5 years it should go from 45% to 95% with the new drugs. it should also drop time in tx from 48 weeks to maybe 4 weeks. SO why tx now when in 1 or 2 years from now tx may be so much more successfull in such a short time unless you MUST tx now? FEAR?
WHAT IS WRONG WITH WAITING
Happy - great post, hope you're hangin' in there ok. Keep marching towards the promised land, by now it should be coming into view.
bobbybull quote: "the wait and watch idea is because in the last 10 years the svr rate has gone from about 10% to 45%. in the next 5 years it should go from 45% to 95% with the new drugs. it should also drop time in tx from 48 weeks to maybe 4 weeks."
Dude, what in the world are you talking about? How do you know that genotype 1 treatment will be so drastically improved in only 5 years so that the SVR rate will go from 45% to 95%??? And how do you know that the treatment duration will be drastically chopped from 48 weeks to a mere 4 weeks simultaneously??? C'mon, that's absurd, there is no evidence or anecdote to even suggest anything like that will happen that soon. Maybe in another 10 or 20 years, but certainly not within 5.
If it turns out that you have some time [Fibrosis <=2], then my vote would be to follow the development of current new treatment drugs, with a view to treating with them when they come to market. On current data, VX-950 should be generally available in 2008/2009, and others are in the pipeline as well.
If it turns out that you have later stage liver damage already [Fibrosis >=3], then the choice becomes more difficult. The longer you wait, the more the disease will damage your liver. Concensus is that Stage 3 and below will actually regress once the insult to the liver [HCV] is removed. There are some who say that Stage 4 damage [cirrhosis] may regress as well, but the jury is out on this point.
mremeet & happyhungry: While I agree that there is absolutely no data to support anything less than 24 weeks [12 SOC = VX & 12 of SOC], there are always outliers to confound the general case. Just for grins, one subject in our trial group bailed out very early - less than 28 days of VX + SOC. Had nasty GI issues. That subject is still SVR at more than 28 weeks post. Amazing, huh?